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The Fudge Family In Paris Letter V. From Miss Biddy Fudge To Miss Dorothy ----.
What a time since I wrote!--I'm a sad, naughty girl--For, tho' like a tee-totum, I'm all in a twirl;--Yet even (as you wittily say) a tee-totumBetween all its twirls gives a letter to note 'em.But, Lord, such a place! and then, DOLLY, my dresses,My gowns, so divine!--there's no language expresses,Except just the two words "superbe, magnifique,"The trimmings of that which I had home last week!It is called--I forget--à la--something which soundedLike alicampane--but in truth I'm confoundedAnd bothered, my dear, 'twixt that troublesome boy's(BOB'S) cookery language, and Madame LE ROI'S:What with fillets of roses, and fillets of veal,Things garni with lace, and things garni with eel,One's hair and one's c...
Thomas Moore
Told By "The Noted Traveler"
Coming, clean from the Maryland-endOf this great National Road of ours,Through your vast West; with the time to spend,Stopping for days in the main towns, whereEvery citizen seemed a friend,And friends grew thick as the wayside flowers, -I found no thing that I might narrateMore singularly strange or queerThan a thing I found in your sister-stateOhio, - at a river-town - down hereIn my notebook: Zanesville - situateOn the stream Muskingum - broad and clear,And navigable, through half the year,North, to Coshocton; south, as farAs Marietta. - But these facts areNot of the story, but the sceneOf the simple little tale I meanTo tell directly - from this, straight throughTo the end that is best worth li...
James Whitcomb Riley
To Flush, My Dog
Loving friend, the gift of one,Who, her own true faith, hath run,Through thy lower nature;Be my benediction saidWith my hand upon thy head,Gentle fellow-creature!Like a lady's ringlets brown,Flow thy silken ears adownEither side demurely,Of thy silver-suited breastShining out from all the restOf thy body purely.Darkly brown thy body is,Till the sunshine, striking this,Alchemize its dulness,When the sleek curls manifoldFlash all over into gold,With a burnished fulness.Underneath my stroking hand,Startled eyes of hazel blandKindling, growing larger,Up thou leapest with a spring,Full of prank and curvetting,Leaping like a charger.Leap! thy broad tail waves a light;Leap! ...
Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Blind Sorrow
"My life is drear; walking I labour sore; The heart in me is heavy as a stone;And of my sorrows this the icy core: Life is so wide, and I am all alone!"Thou did'st walk so, with heaven-born eyes down bent Upon the earth's gold-rosy, radiant clay,That thou had'st seen no star in all God's tent Had not thy tears made pools first on the way.Ah, little knowest thou the tender care In a love-plenteous cloak around thee thrown!Full many a dim-seen, saving mountain-stair Toiling thou climb'st--but not one step alone!Lift but thy languid head and see thy guide; Let thy steps go in his, nor choose thine own;Then soon wilt thou, thine eyes with wonder wide, Cry, Now I know I never was alone!
George MacDonald
The Holy War
"For here lay the excellent wisdom of him that built Mansoul, that the walls could never be broken down nor hurt by the most mighty adverse potentate unless the townsmen gave consent thereto." - BUNYAN'S Holy War.A tinker out of Bedford,A vagrant oft in quod,A private under Fairfax,A minister of God,Two hundred years and thirtyEre Armageddon cameHis single hand portrayed it,And Bunyan was his name!He mapped for those who follow,The world in which we are,"This famous town of Mansoul"That takes the Holy War.Her true and traitor people,The Gates along her wall,From Eye Gate unto Feel Gate,John Bunyan showed them all.All enemy divisions,Recruits of every class,And highly-screened pos...
Rudyard
Three Seasons
'A cup for hope!' she said,In springtime ere the bloom was old:The crimson wine was poor and cold By her mouth's richer red. 'A cup for love!' how low,How soft the words; and all the whileHer blush was rippling with a smile Like summer after snow. 'A cup for memory!'Cold cup that one must drain alone:While autumn winds are up and moan Across the barren sea. Hope, memory, love:Hope for fair morn, and love for day,And memory for the evening grey And solitary dove.
Christina Georgina Rossetti
From Iphigenia In Tauris.
ACT IV. SCENE 5.SONG OF THE FATES.Ye children of mortalsThe deities dread!The mastery hold theyIn hands all-eternal,And use them, unquestioned,What manner they like.Let him fear them doubly,Whom they have uplifted!On cliffs and on clouds, oh,Round tables all-golden,he seats are made ready.When rises contention,The guests are humid downwardsWith shame and dishonorTo deep depths of midnight,And vainly await they,Bound fast in the darkness,A just condemnation.But they remain everIn firmness unshakenRound tables all-golden.On stride they from mountainTo mountain far distant:From out the abysses'Dark jaws, the breath risesOf torment-choked TitansUp ...
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Hugo's "Flower To Butterfly"
Sweet, bide with me and let my loveBe an enduring tether;Oh, wanton not from spot to spot,But let us dwell together.You've come each morn to sip the sweetsWith which you found me dripping,Yet never knew it was not dewBut tears that you were sipping.You gambol over honey meadsWhere siren bees are humming;But mine the fate to watch and waitFor my beloved's coming.The sunshine that delights you nowShall fade to darkness gloomy;You should not fear if, biding here,You nestled closer to me.So rest you, love, and be my love,That my enraptured bloomingMay fill your sight with tender light,Your wings with sweet perfuming.Or, if you will not bide with meUpon this quiet heather,Oh, give me ...
Eugene Field
Song Of The Saints And Angels
JANUARY 26, 1885. Gordon, the self-refusing, Gordon, the lover of God, Gordon, the good part choosing, Welcome along the road! Thou knowest the man, O Father! To do thy will he ran; Men's praises he did not gather: There is scarce such another man! Thy black sheep's faithful shepherd Who knew not how to flee, Is torn by the desert leopard, And comes wounded home to thee! Home he is coming the faster That the way he could not miss: In thy arms, oh take him, Master, And heal him with a kiss! Then give him a thousand cities To rule till their evils cease, And their wailing minor ditties Die in a psalm of peace.
To An English Friend
The seed that wasteful autumn castTo waver on its stormy blast,Long o'er the wintry desert tost,Its living germ has never lost.Dropped by the weary tempest's wing,It feels the kindling ray of spring,And, starting from its dream of death,Pours on the air its perfumed breath.So, parted by the rolling flood,The love that springs from common bloodNeeds but a single sunlit hourOf mingling smiles to bud and flower;Unharmed its slumbering life has flown,From shore to shore, from zone to zone,Where summer's falling roses stainThe tepid waves of Pontchartrain,Or where the lichen creeps belowKatahdin's wreaths of whirling snow.Though fiery sun and stiffening coldMay change the fair ancestral mould,No winter chills, no ...
Oliver Wendell Holmes
Sheridan.
Embalm'd in fame, and sacred from decay,What mighty name, in arms, in arts, or verse,From England claims this consecrated day.Her nobles crowding round the shadowy hearse?Hark! from yon fane, within whose hallow'd mounds,Her bards, her warriors, and her statesmen, sleep;The solemn, slow, funereal bell resounds,While mournful echoes dread accordance keep.Spirits revered! beyond that awful bourne.Who share the dark communion of the tomb,A kindred genius seeks your dread sojourn;Ye heirs of glory! hail a brother home.Obscured, as SHERIDAN to dust descends,Recedes each ray from Wit's effulgent sphere;Lo! every Muse in silent sorrow bends,Her votive laurels mingling o'er his bier.But chiefly thou, from whose polluted shrine
Thomas Gent
Power Of Love.
Love it is the precious loom, Whose shuttle weaves each tangled thread, And works flowers of exquisite bloom, Shedding their perfume where we tread.
James McIntyre
Self-Interogation.
"The evening passes fast away.'Tis almost time to rest;What thoughts has left the vanished day,What feelings in thy breast?"The vanished day? It leaves a senseOf labour hardly done;Of little gained with vast expense,A sense of grief alone?"Time stands before the door of Death,Upbraiding bitterlyAnd Conscience, with exhaustless breath,Pours black reproach on me:"And though I've said that Conscience liesAnd Time should Fate condemn;Still, sad Repentance clouds my eyes,And makes me yield to them!"Then art thou glad to seek repose?Art glad to leave the sea,And anchor all thy weary woesIn calm Eternity?"Nothing regrets to see thee go,Not one voice sobs' farewell;'And where thy heart h...
Emily Bronte
Bec's[1] Birth-Day; Nov. 8, 1726
This day, dear Bec, is thy nativity;Had Fate a luckier one, she'd give it ye.She chose a thread of greatest length,And doubly twisted it for strength:Nor will be able with her shearsTo cut it off these forty years.Then who says care will kill a cat?Rebecca shows they're out in that.For she, though overrun with care,Continues healthy, fat, and fair. As, if the gout should seize the head,Doctors pronounce the patient dead;But, if they can, by all their arts,Eject it to the extremest parts,They give the sick man joy, and praiseThe gout that will prolong his days.Rebecca thus I gladly greet,Who drives her cares to hands and feet:For, though philosophers maintainThe limbs are guided by the brain,Quite contrary Rebecca's le...
Jonathan Swift
From Behind the Lattice
I see your red-gold hair and knowHow white the hidden skin must be,Though sun-kissed face and fingers showThe fervour of the noon-day glow,The keenness of the sea.My longing fancies ebb and flow,Still circling constant unto this;My great desire (ah, whisper low)To plant on thy forbidden snowThe rosebud of a kiss.The scarlet flower would spread and grow,Your whiteness change and flush,Be still, my reckless heart, beat slow,'T is but a dream that stirs thee so!)To one transparent blush.
Adela Florence Cory Nicolson
You Ask Me, Why, Tho' Ill At Ease
You ask me, why, tho' ill at ease,Within this region I subsist,Whose spirits falter in the mist,And languish for the purple seas.It is the land that freemen till,That sober-suited Freedom chose,The land, where girt with friends or foesA man may speak the thing he will;A land of settled government,A land of just and old renown,Where Freedom slowly broadens downFrom precedent to precedent:Where faction seldom gathers head,But by degrees to fullness wrought,The strength of some diffusive thoughtHath time and space to work and spread.Should banded unions persecuteOpinion, and induce a timeWhen single thought is civil crime,And individual freedom mute;Tho' Power should make from land to landThe name of...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
Sestina I.
A qualunque animale alberga in terra.NIGHT BRINGS HIM NO REST. HE IS THE PREY OF DESPAIR. To every animal that dwells on earth,Except to those which have in hate the sun,Their time of labour is while lasts the day;But when high heaven relumes its thousand stars,This seeks his hut, and that its native wood,Each finds repose, at least until the dawn.But I, when fresh and fair begins the dawnTo chase the lingering shades that cloak'd the earth,Wakening the animals in every wood,No truce to sorrow find while rolls the sun;And, when again I see the glistening stars,Still wander, weeping, wishing for the day.When sober evening chases the bright day,And this our darkness makes for others dawn,Pensive I look upon...
Francesco Petrarca
On The Death Of Lord Hastings.[1]
Must noble Hastings immaturely die, The honour of his ancient family; Beauty and learning thus together meet, To bring a winding for a wedding-sheet? Must Virtue prove Death's harbinger? must she, With him expiring, feel mortality? Is death, Sin's wages, Grace's now? shall Art Make us more learned, only to depart? If merit be disease; if virtue death; To be good, not to be; who'd then bequeath Himself to discipline? who'd not esteem Labour a crime? study, self-murder deem? Our noble youth now have pretence to be Dunces securely, ignorant healthfully. Rare linguist, whose worth speaks itself, whose praise, Though not his own, all tongues besides do raise: Than whom great Alexander may seem less...
John Dryden